Loading...
The Rural Voice, 1988-11, Page 12BAKER'S NURSERY For: Hardy Shade Trees Maples: Emerald Queen Norway Red Maple Columnar Green Ash Mountain Ash Linden Crab Apple & More Todd Baker, Assistant Manager cultivating our stock. BAKER'S NURSERY R.R. 2, Bayfield, Ont. 519-482-9995 Wholesale & Retail "See us for windbreak material." 0 THE RURAL VOICE THE ELECTION AND THE FREE TRADE ISSUE November already has one Remembrance Day. If Brian Mulroney wins that November 21 election, we'll have two. Generations have observed the traditional Remembrance Day on November 11, commemorating the end of the First World War on the 1 l th hour of the I l th day of the 1 l th month. In years to come, generations that follow will mourn November 21 as the day Canadians sold themselves down the Yankee river of free trade. My late father, who survived four years in the mud and blood of that "Great War," would always remind me that the Canadian soldiers were victors in more ways than one. On Easter weekend, 1917, the Canadian boys battled their way to the crest of Vimy Ridge, winning the first major battle for the allies in four years. The battle -hardened troops distinguished the Canadian Corps and in the process unknowingly won their country its first taste of independence from the British Empire. Just 71 years later, with indepen- dence in full bloom, Canadian voters will unknowingly, or worse, know- ingly, hand Brian and his boys the mandate to chain us to the American Empire. Were he alive, my father would be disgraced. I am alive, and if Cana- dians commit this foolish act I will be disgraced. If this emotional appeal offends... tough! If anyone throws Brian's argument back at me that free trade in fact will enhance Canadian independence — horse manure! Fifteen years as an agriculture reporter honed my sense of smell so I could identify a pile of crap blind- folded at a hundred paces. The Americans have made no bones about it in their Statement of Administrative Action which accom- panies the free trade deal. Successful in only diluting Canadian marketing boards and their import quotas, they intend to finish them off later. "The United States has not yet succeeded in eliminating ... quotas which still restrict U.S. opportunities to sell in the Canadian market ... The United States intends to seek further liberalization with respect to agri- cultural import barriers as a high priority in our bilateral relationship with Canada." Them's the words, folks, used in the leaked U.S. document. Let me interpret: "further liberalization" means a further dismantling of the only barriers holding the flood of American food from coming across our border. Canadian supply management marketing boards, of course, have been the only stable sectors in the depression that has plagued Canadian farmers for the entire decade. Some Canadians may not like marketing boards, but they're the only thing standing in the way of Canadians being beholden to Amer- ican farmers and corporations to fill our feed trough. Those farmers who operate in the so-called free market don't like marketing boards because they're exporting more to Uncle Sam than he's shipping north. But listen for their screams for protection once the Canadian dollar rises close to par with the American greenback. I say that if you value Canadian independence, on November 21 tell Brian and his boys and girls to take a hike.0 Gord Wainman has been an urban - based agriculture reporter for 13 year.